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Factors associated with edvisor perceptions of their work being understood and valued are not what they seem
Author(s) -
Colin Simpson,
Jessica Katherine Frawley,
Lina Markauskaitė,
Peter Goodyear
Publication year - 2021
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Conference proceedings
DOI - 10.14742/ascilite2021.0102
Subject(s) - institution , perception , work (physics) , higher education , academic institution , space (punctuation) , public relations , knowledge management , psychology , sociology , engineering ethics , pedagogy , computer science , political science , engineering , social science , mechanical engineering , neuroscience , library science , law , operating system
People sit at the heart of digital transformation in Higher Education. Often, they are ‘Third Space’ support staff, including Learning Designers, Education Technologists and Academic Developers, broadly defined here as ‘edvisors’ – educator-advisors. Edvisors share their expertise of pedagogy and technology to support, guide and lead change in teaching practices but they can be hampered by numerous factors that diminish their ability to contribute meaningfully. While the work that some types of edvisors – largely academic developers and learning designers – do is well represented in research, there has been little consideration of these underlying challenges. This paper reports on a survey of 58 edvisors in 24 Higher Education institutions in Australia relating to their perceptions of how their work is understood and valued by their direct managers, edvisors in other roles in their institution, academics and other managers in the institution. The data were analysed to look for variations by role type, job title, academic/professional classification, gender, and qualifications. Results show that edvisors feel their work is more valued than understood overall but relationships between different edvisor role types can be more fractious than those they have with academics. Improving understanding and valuing of edvisors is vital to their contribution to transformation.

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